Once-a-month cooking made easy

Stephanie Cornais found a cooking method that saved time and money, but it left her exhausted.

Stephanie, who blogs about parenthood and healthy living at Mama and Baby Love, would cook a month’s worth of meals in one day, then store them in the freezer.

It’s an idea that’s been around for awhile. In fact, J.D. wrote about it back in 2007. By batch cooking, not only do you have healthy, home-cooked meals when dinner time rolls around, but you also can save money by buying in bulk and not relying on convenience foods.

“I buy my beef and chicken straight from a local farmer, and buying beef in bulk saves me a good amount money,” says Stephanie. “And I save money by always having my freezer full of food and never having to rely on take out, fast food, or processed frozen foods from the grocery store.”

Once-a-month cooking is a lot of work!

Stephanie was saving money and had a freezer-full of home-cooked meals, but once-a-month cooking was problematic.

For one thing, Stephanie experienced a lot of anxiety leading up to the big cooking day. “I was still learning how to cook, I was afraid of messing up, and I was afraid of feeling the emotions that came up in the kitchen,” she says. “My mother suffers from mental illness and being in the kitchen brought up a lot of painful memories of not having a mother who really took care of me and nourished me.”
Also, the cooking marathons were physically exhausting. A once-a-month cooking session requires a lot of planning. “Between the juggling of cooking and childcare, the prep work, organization, and scheduling, it can be overwhelming,” she says.

And don’t forget, you’re doing a month’s worth of cooking in one day. “I would be making a bunch of all kinds of different meals (fajitas, meatloaf, casseroles, etc.) that all required chopping, assembling, cooking on the stovetop or oven, and then freezing,” she says. “So I would be in the kitchen all day long and have a huge variety of dinners to freeze.” Then there’s the cleanup and scrubbing of pans. No wonder it took more than 12 hours, even with a friend helping out. “My feet would kill me!” says Stephanie.

Make once-a-month cooking a snap with a slow cooker
About six years ago, Stephanie bought a slow cooker.

“No one taught me how to cook growing up, so I had to teach myself,” she says. “The slow cooker was the perfect beginning point. I never messed up anything in the slow cooker, it gave me confidence to try other things. I could just chop and dump and run the hell out of the kitchen.”

So after experiencing the drawbacks to once-a-month cooking, Stephanie tried a new method using her slow cooker. “Basically, all I was did was chop vegetables and assemble ingredients,” says Stephanie. “I just dumped the veggies into the gallon-sized Ziploc bags, then added the meat, then added the spices.”

She still enjoyed the money-saving benefits of once-a-month cooking, and because she was using her foolproof slow cooker, she had a lot less anxiety leading up to cooking day.

The new method also saved her a lot of time. “Now it takes about two hours,” she says. “Before there was lots of time spent coordinating grocery shopping and tasks, but now I probably spend about 15 minutes getting my grocery list ready. I simply chop and assemble, then immediately freeze. This way cuts the cooking down by 75%, but it’s only slow cooker meals.”

In fact, Stephanie got so efficient with this process that she wrote an ecookbook to show others how to do the same. “I group my recipes by three and include grocery lists in the beginning of the book,” she says.

“If you are making a fresh, made from scratch meal every night, this will blow your mind,” says Stephanie. “It will save so much time.”

How to make a freezer-to-crockpot meal

To see how freezer-to-crockpot meals work, check out Stephanie’s recipe for orange-beef stew.

5. Day of cooking, add contents of freezer bag, roast, 2 cups of beef broth, salt, and pepper to slow cooker. Cook on low for 8 hours or high for 4 hours.

6. Serve with fresh salad and sourdough bread, if you have it.

Of course, this once-a-month method isn’t for everyone. “Some people don’t like to have slow cooker meals for most of the week,” she says. “So the other [once-a-month cooking method] is perfect for a wider variety of meals. But for me, this was a way to make a month’s worth of meals that were actually healthy in just two hours. I don’t use canned condensed soup or processed ingredients, so even though I am just chopping, assembling, and dumping into my slow cooker, I can say I made dinner from scratch!”

And even Stephanie doesn’t eat crockpot meals every day. “I usually make one dinner a week fresh, based on what’s in season and inspires me,” she says. “Then we usually go out to eat once a week, too.”
Personally, I could see myself having a few of these frozen meals in the freezer, just for those days when I don’t feel like cooking. But what do you think? Is this something you would try?

We’re trying a hybrid of this in our house. Basically, on the weekends, I’ll make a double batch of soup. We’ll freeze most of it. I also made some meal components: shredded chicken cooked in salsa, taco meat, etc. and freeze those. It’s not as intensive as once a month cooking but it covers us when the Thursday night takeout urge hits.

I like the shredded chicken cooked in salsa idea. I already bake chicken breasts, slice them and put them in the fridge to add to whatever meal I choose. But adding salsa to shredded chicken would be great for the times I make rice, pasta, and am looking for something quick and spicy to add to it. Great idea!

The slow cooker is a great tool, but I get tired of slow-cooker type meals easily. I only use it a couple of times a month. What I do frequently is to make a freezer meal or two while I’m cooking a regular meal, usually on the weekend. If I’m making meatloaf, for example, I’ll make 2-4 of them at the same time, cook one for dinner that night, and freeze the rest for future weeknights when I’m too tired or busy to cook. It’s generally cheaper to buy the ingredients in bulk, too, so the marginal cost of each meal is slightly cheaper.

I am impressed by stuff like this, but I always wonder how big people’s freezers are! I’m trying to do more batch cooking, but so far am only to the point where I can get about 5 days ahead of matters.

I’d love it if someone could recommend a resource for good vegetarian slow cooker meals. Chili and bean soup can get a little tiresome after a while.

I know, my freezer only has room for a few meals, definitely not a month’s! I also store frozen uncooked ingredients though (frozen vegetables, fruit, dough, big bags of mozzarella cheese, and ravioli), if I only kept pre-cooked stuff I could at least fit a couple weeks’. Maybe if you have a stand freezer, or buy things ONLY for specific meals the day that you prepare them?

If you freeze food in large ziplock bags so they’re thin and flat (like a square pizza), then you can fit an *amazing* amount of food in the freezer. Use some pans while you’re freezing things to keep the bags lying flat, and they stack up like pancakes. I used to do once-a-month cooking, back when I had only the freezer on top of my fridge.

I do a little bit of batch cooking when I make my regular meals (we try to freeze leftovers so we always have options) and the meat that we buy in bulk and for my family one of the keys to being able to do this was buying a chest freezer.

Over the course of time, even with the freezer purchase, this has helped us save money by buying food in bulk and reducing our eating out costs.

Robin Robertson is my favorite veggie cookbook author. I have the vegan slow cooker one and it is great. There is also another one called The Vegan Slow Cooker by Kathy Hester that is good.

Honestly, though, it is hard to go wrong with a slow cooker. Just throw a bunch of things that sound like they go together in there with twice as much spice as you would ordinarily use and you are good to go! I make improv-soups all the time.

Great book with tons of slow cooker recipies (vegetarian and non-vegetarian) is the Fix It & Forget About It cookbook. It has everything from soup to beverages to casseroles, breads, and desserts to try in your slow cooker.

You need a good chest freezer AND a vacuum sealer. Yes, the vacuum sealer bags are a little pricey, but if you are already buying in bulk it is well worth the investment. In the long run, it will beat double-wrapping and Ziploc bags.

People disagree, but I think as long as your slow cooker is hot enough, and as long as you cook it long enough, and the chicken reaches an internal temp of 170, you’re in the clear. If you aren’t comfortable and will worry, then don’t do it, but I find it convenient and haven’t died yet.

The booklet that came with my slowcooker said that you can put frozen food in you just need to heat up a cup of whatever liquid you are putting in and add an hour to the cook time. I do this all the time and I’ve never had any problems.

You could alternatively add one small step: When you go to put today’s ingredients into the slow-cooker, also take tomorrow’s bag out of the freezer and put it in a bowl/plate to thaw in the fridge.

I enjoyed cooking every day and putting single-servings of leftovers into the freezer duing Fall Break, since I’m single and it’s easier to cook a meal that’s 3-4 people-sized than single-sized. Unfortunately, during the regular work week I just eat the same meal 3-4 days in a row since I can’t be bothered to cook every night, and my freezer is much too full of other things to fit many meals into it. Still, it’s nice to have a few to pick from when I really need a break from whatever this week’s meal was!

I love my slow cookers (yes,plural). I make a big batch of soup and freeze the leftovers, although I usually have to add water or broth to thin it out a bit. I just made a large batch of turkey broth and we’ll have turkey and rice soup tonight. Even 1-2 freezer meals a week saves time and money.

Interesting idea, but probably best for people who want the cooking out of sight, out of mind! I really like cooking, and just make enough extra for one or two more meals to freeze or eat throughout the week.

Also, the slow cooker gets monotonous if you cook vegetarian, which is one of our big frguality strategies (as city dwellers we don’t have the freezer space or budget to buy meat from a local farmer). There are only so many mushy-vegetables-and-legumes meals you want to eat in a given week. On the other had, a vegetarian stir fry or pasta dish is really, really fast.

I agree; I do make extra and freeze (mostly for work-week lunches, but also sometimes components of dinner dishes like bolognese sauce or cooked beans), but what has really helped me most is having a stable of quick, tasty dishes that can come together with ingredients I have on hand.

If childcare is an issue and a friend must help her with the cooking, I have to wonder where the child’s father is in all of this.

Slow cookers are wonderful, but even with a diverse set of recipes I agree it can be monotonous. Everything comes out soft, and I enjoy some texture (something crisp, something that crunches) as part of my meal.

I admire the industriousness of this! I would not do it myself, though, both because I don’t want to spend a whole day in the kitchen, and I’d rather base my dinners around something fresh, like a big stalk of Brussels sprouts,for example. But your method makes sense for good-sized families.

FYI, I’m doing a drawing for a $50 Amazon gift card, for folks who do my five-minute survey on what they like to read online. Stop by if you’re interested; there’s not much competition yet .

I have a tip that might be old news to many of you, but I just discovered them two years ago – frozen chopped onions! They’re in the frozen food aisle with all the other frozen veggies. So much easier than chopping up onions. And unlike fresh onions you can often find a coupon or buy one, get one on them. I’m not kidding myself that they’re saving me a lot (if any) money over fresh onions, but I just love them for convenience sake.

We only do batch cooking on a weekly basis (this is already hard enough). On the weekends, we cook 3 different meals good for myself and my wife. We pack/freeze the meals to 10 individual containers Each container is good for 2 people, so this will be good for 5 days for me and my wife.

If we get bored with the taste, we just cook easy meals. We don’t always finish all 10 containers per week. But we repeat the same process every week, cooking for 3 meals in 10 containers. With time, you will have a good mixture of various frozen meals, so you will not get bored.

You’ll be surprised how well some foods can be frozen. We’ve tried a lot of recipes with great success. Some of which are Oven roasted chicken, smoked ribs, thai chicken/beef curry (red, panang, green), sweet/sour pork/chicken, steamed pork ribs, chicken/beef basil, meatballs with marinara/carbonara, chicken alfredo (pasta is not frozen).

Another method of making meals ahead is to can them. It is a lot of work initially, but the meals keep for a much longer time than frozen foods do. I felt very rich when we had jars and jars of cooked meats and beef stew in our pantry.

I use our slow cooker all the time (you can even do chowder-style soups in them if you have an immersion blender, which is not very expensive and which changed my whole cooking life), but I doubt I’d do this.

Jake actually likes a lot of the frozen convenience stuff (and there are a lot of things I like too, though not as many), and our freezer isn’t very big. So most of the space is taken up and we don’t have room to freeze anything we make from scratch.

I do use the fact that Jake won’t eat leftovers to my advantage by putting soup from the Crockpot in single-serving tupperwares right away, and then one crockpot meal is lunch at work for a week. And since I don’t eat meat, it’s SUPER cheap.

Thanks so much for this link! I love the slow cooker because it is so easy even I have trouble screwing it up (and I can burn water…), but I only know a few recipes and often don’t feel like I have time to assemble all the ingredients. A step-by-step guide to making batches like this is a huge help for me. Goodbye pizza and tuna helper

This is all a bit too dutiful, assembly-line and joyless for my taste. Food preparation should not be a source of pointless anxiety.

Also, honestly, given the Increasing unreliability of the electric grid here in the northeast, I don’t want to have to throw out several weeks worth of food every time the power goes out (or depend on a gas-powered generator when all the gas stations may be closed.)

I have to agree here. I had a chest freezer with meat I bought in bulk and frozen things. I had to empty it out completely twice in just over 2 years—once for Hurricane Irene and just recently for Sandy. It is PAINFUL to see all of that food go to waste. A generator isn’t an option for me (pricey to buy, pricey to run). And the point about the gas is imp. The gas shortages around here were bad.

My chest freezer is now actually empty because I can’t bear to fill it up again. I have started to buy fresh food only 3 days in advance, and I hate grocery shopping! But with the winter coming on—we already had a snowstorm around Halloween (2nd year in a row). Didn’t lose electricity, but surely were just lucky that time because many others did.

I don’t have more than 2 pieces of meat and 1 meal in the regular freezer now at one time. Live and learn.

But for those of you with no issues in that regard, it’s a good practice to cook ahead.
I wish there was a better way. It is nice to have meals at the ready.

A while back we lost power for about 5 days in record breaking heat. Our friend who had bought a whole cow just saw it as an opportunity to have a kick ass barbeque. Lemons into lemonade, I guess.

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Amy Jsays:

27 November 2012 at 9:50 am

I bought stephanie’s ebook a couple of weeks ago it was recommended on another blog (I don’t know her at all). Last week I made 4 different recipes and was able to put 8 dinners in the freezer for use whenever we don’t have the time to cook. We have had two of them and they are delicious – not your average slow cooker meals – great flavor and the whole thing from shopping to freezer took me like three hours – I could never do Once a month cooking because my limit in the kitchen is a couple of hours. A lot of the comments seem to say “i could never do that because…” it is not an end all cure but another tool to deal with an everyday chore.

I’ve been on-and-off with batch cooking for the last couple years. Since I switched to Paleo eating I haven’t had as many slow cooker recipes at my fingertips (though there are many, I just need to find ones I like). I love using my slow cooker but I almost never freeze meals after I make them, just package them up to eat within the next week. I don’t mind eating the same thing every day! I don’t think month-long cooking would work in my house because of the size of our freezer – which is the same reason why I don’t buy local meat in bulk.

We do this because our kids activities bring us home just in time for a late dinnner every day. No time to cook. Each week, we make 1 meal, but 5 batches of it and freeze 4. We also cook fresh on shopping day and get take out or eat out once a week. Over time, we buibuilt up a portfolio of recipes. We actually have 2 slow cookers in case one is dirty or in use. We make stews, chilis, roasts, soups, casseroles, stir frys, curries and others.

The one thing we noticed is that you need to defrost your meals overnight before they go into the slow cooker the next morning. Otherwise, they don’t always cook through.

I loved this article. I’ve been doing this for years (bulk cooking, not using the crockpot)/….hamburger goulash, meatloaves,beef stew, chicken soups, mock pot pies, and others; freezing them in one and two portion bags. One thing I also do for cutting down on prep time is to cut up vegetables when they’re in season (zucchini, onions, tomatoes, celery, etc.) place about one cup into each baggie and then freeze and label them, so whenever I do want to cook, I already have my vegetables already to go and don’t have to prep that day for most things. I also find that if I have a huge pot roast, I’ll cook it up, then leftover meat will be cut up small getting ready for a big pot of beef stew. So, I sort of do prep work as I go along. This has saved us a lot of money over the years.

I’m wondering if this is just a MN thing. We have a place, “Let’s Dish,” http://www.letsdish.com/ that is really cool. You go in, compile 12 meals from their already prepped stations (each meal serves 6, meaning more than enough for way over 12 meals for a family not of 6) for about $200, and it’s kind of a social thing for us busy ladies, though my hubby loves the entertainment too. You take it all home, labeled and ready to go, and pop it in the freezer. Then we have really excellent and healthy gourmet meals on demand when we don’t have a clue. Do other states have this?

We used to have Let’s Eat here in Florida, but the last one closed a year or two ago. I guess they couldn’t do it profitably. The meals were more expensive than what I’d typically pay at home, but when I factored in the social time, like you mentioned, the lack of having to do clean-up, and the somewhat-exotic recipes, it was worthwhile.

A friend and I tried switching it up by doing the same thing at our own houses, but it just wasn’t the same.

Yup, they still have some of these type of things in Atlanta — Dinner A’fare is the one that comes to mind. My boyfriend and I used to go every now and then. Not as pricey as the one you mentioned, but still creative, fresh recipes that were easy to assemble.

With our first baby due in the next 1-2 months, we are working hard to stock up on prepped food in our freezer. It will be interesting to see which preparations, foods, and meals work best when reheated or thrown in the slow cooker later. I don’t have energy in this third trimester to do it all in one day, but I love the idea of it. 12 hours of cooking once a month saves a ton of time compared to cooking a few times a day everyday of the month, but it does take a lot of energy. It definitely saves money over eating out, deliveries, or store bought prepped chicken nuggets.

Yikes. I agree with the person who said this read like an advertisement.

I would love to batch things but I hate cooking and we don’t have a huge refrigerator. Where we are going to move has the tiniest of kitchens so I don’t even have the space to set-up for this stuff. The joys of apartment life, I guess.

I’m trying to get myself up to actually cooking once a month. But, since we used the slow cooker in our T-Day preparations, I’m up for trying it again to cook something just for us. I’ve looked up a slow cooker recipe for veggie chili and I’m committed to trying it out soon.

I can see batch cooking for a few meals a week, but not more than that. But we’re all different in our tastes. To me, a few times a week but would enough to help me save some time overall, especially on very busy days, while not being a bit too much.

I can’t vouch for the liners as I try to shy away from heating up plastics that make contact with my food. I’ve never had an issue soaking the insert and lightly scrubbing as I would a normal ceramic baking dish. Just be diligent about wiping up spills as you go and they won’t cake/bake onto the insert.

As for the veggies, consider adding them 30-45 minutes before the cooking time expires. This way, they won’t have the chance to turn to mush for having been in the pot for 4-6 hours.

We love the crockpot liners. One tip is to be careful about removing food from them so you don’t make a hole in the liner. For years I would refrain from using the crockpot because clean up was a chore, but the liners make it a snap now. When we have small amounts of leftovers – beans, peas, carrots, etc. we put them in a big freezer container. When it is full, we make vegetable soup in the crockpot.

Wow, I can’t even imagine doing a month’s worth of cooking in one day. That must have been hectic, messy and very stressful! The slow-cooker is seriously the best kitchen tool ever. Not only do you save time cooking because you just throw it into a pot and let it sit for 6 hours, but all it takes to make a delicious meal is a cut of meat, some veggies and a can of soup or broth. If you don’t use a slow-cooker, getting the same amount of savory taste takes a lot of work. Thanks for the post!

I’m an avid hobbyist in the kitchen and see my time in there as time spent honing a skill; and batch cooking doesn’t really offer many instances to experiment. I only have to feed two mouths including myself, but I typically cook enough for 6 servings. That way, we can have a serving immediately with the options of 1) having seconds and for lunch the next day or 2) have lunch for the next day and a serving for whenever (freeze if much later) – it’s usually the former!

I see myself mirroring what my mother did for the family while I was growing up. Coming from an immigrant background, our meals revolve largely around rice. Culturally, our dishes are highly seasoned and flavor-packed so that it may be supplemented with rice. I was a latchkey kid and it was my duty to put a pot of rice on the stove as soon as I got home from school and finished my homework. Mom and dad would get home from work around 530pm and we’d have a fresh cooked meal on the table by 630pm. She would pack herself and my father their lunches for the next day prior to serving the family. If there were any leftovers after our meal, it would be an auxiliary dish at tomorrow night’s dinner. Not much lasted more than 2 days in our house. There was minimal waste, if any.

My mother’s secret is menu planning. She chose which proteins needed to be used that week and went from there. Shopping for fresh produce throughout the week afforded her the freedom to change recipes on the fly depending on what’s on sale. If something could be adapted to another recipe later in the same week, it would become the ingredient of the week. I was her little sous chef – I helped her pick herbs, peel and chop veggies and, my personal favorite, taste testing! We’d prep for two days ahead, but if something needed same-day handling, I would add it to my list of daily chores to complete before she got home so that she could start cooking immediately.

I adopted this process as an adult and it’s working out pretty well for my partner and I. Plan ahead, prep early and enjoy fresh meals throughout the week.

I’ve actually had a lot of fun lately with “batch cooking” (as I call it).

I’ve been dating a woman for several months now. We don’t see each other during the week — only on weekends. And neither of us likes to cook during the week. So, we’ve started spending a part of each Sunday afternoon doing batch cooking.

Every week, we each pick a recipe to prepare. I make six servings of my recipe, and she make six servings of hers. This week, for instance, I used a leftover Thanksgiving ham hock and a bunch of beans to make a delicious (and cheap!) ham and bean soup. She used some salmon to make a great Asian salad.

By cooking in advance, we make smarter/healthier decisions. And we’re savings lots of money on food. Even when we use prime ingredients (which is always), we save because we’re preparing in bulk and because we’re not eating out, which is what we’d both normally tend to. Plus, it’s fun to spend some time working in the kitchen together. It’s a win all around.

We do a shorter, smaller version of batch cooking. Every Sunday, I try to make one thing in the crockpot and one item that can be popped into the oven, like lasagna or enchiladas. It’s a LOT of work just to make two meals at once; I can’t imagine doing much more than that in one go!

I generally enjoy cooking a meal at dinner time, even if it is very simple (and most of my meals are quite simple). However, when I do make something, I will make extra and freeze the balance,especially soups and spaghetti sauce. So, in general I keep a bit of a freezer stash that can be pulled out easily when I need something. Kind of the lazy person’s way to a freezer stash, I guess. I also keep a list of very quick and easy meals for those nights when I run out of steam. It reminds me of what is possible: breakfast burritos, miso soup, pasta with sauteed vegies, etc.

I love this idea. I’ve been using my crockpot 1-2 times a week lately, which has been a huge help in having food ready when I get home and am so starved that I can’t think clearly enough to put together a decent dinner. I’ve been intrigued with the batch cooking idea for a while, but haven’t done it because I don’t have the foresight to thaw things and don’t like to eat food that was cooked and then frozen (talk about mushy!). I’m going to test this out this weekend– but instead of getting the ebook, I’ll just find some new crockpot recipes that use ingredients that freeze well.

I actually made four of Stephanie’s freezer meals about six months ago. Each one made two gallon ziplocks and fed my family of four for two full meals, and usually a couple of lunches. I think the next time I would cut the recipe in half but still make two bags so there are less leftovers, and add more spices. We found her recipes to be pretty bland, but when we added some herbs and spices, we liked them very well.

Also, this WAS very easy. El Nerdo said to just make something on the weekend and reheat, and I do that as well, but I’m not going to feed my kids the same roast for five weeknights in a row (which I don’t think he necessarily meant). Some days are so crazy with two little kids and two parents with multiple jobs that even assembling something for the crockpot takes more time than I want to spare. And for those days, these are great.

Like some people have mentioned, while I was a grad student, I used to do once-a-week cooking on the weekends, including the gravies and side-dishes. And, on the super busy weekdays, I would just do the main dish like heating up the bread or boiling the rice. Later I started cooking everyday and man! It can really zap your energy and stress you out. I really wonder how my parents were able to cook fresh food everyday and still take care of their professional lives smoothly. I’ve read a lot of positive reviews about the slow cooker and would like to try it sometime in the future.

I don’t do well with leftovers, especially things from the freezer, so I think I would be horrible at once a month cooking. I like the ritual of making a meal at night, too. I do try prep ahead, though, if I can – like chop the whole onion and store what I don’t need for the next recipe.

I’m surprised no one has mentioned a rice cooker/steamer. We are in a small condo for a few months with the tiniest kitchen – pretty much just one small counter that’s mostly taken up by the dish drain and coffee pot, a small oven, three burners, a small sink, and a full size fridge. We had to buy side tables to have space to mix and chop anything.

We cook entirely vegetarian and started using the rice cooker when we moved in to maximize time/space/ingredients. We have made a number of delicious meals. Using the steamer basket to cook the vegetables and also adding broth/herbs to the rice or quinoa cooking below, we get a great meal (usually enough for lunch the next day, too). Yesterday we did yams and cauliflower in the steamer with coconut/cilantro rice and used these ingredients in burritos. SInce switching to primarily steamed vegetables, we’ve almost stopped using olive oil in cooking. You can be creative with the ingredients and any sauce/condiment to go with the veg and rice. I am sure we will continue to use the rice cooker even when we have a bigger kitchen.

I do NOT do once a month cooking because:
It actually eats up at least 2 LONG days (1 shop & prep, 1 cook)
I miss MANY weekly deals at my stores & pay WAAAAY too much for some stuff
I just do NOT like certain dishes reheated like stir fry’s
I like to change the plan if/when I find a manager’s special at the stores

I DO once a week cooking. I get whatever is on sale in meats and veg, plan to eat something 2x in the week and freeze 2-5 additional servings. After a month or 3 I have a wide variety on hand. Lately it has all been soups (chicken broth, gumbo, veg/mushroom/barley). Right now I am looking for a ‘deal’ on ground beef-I need meatballs meatloaf. I will also soon be doing some chicken leg quarters-prob make 6-2 BBQ, 2 oven fried and 2 lemon/galic/parsley. Each thigh = dinner. 2 drumsticks = lunch.

I don’t do once a month cooking, but if I’m feeling energetic, I’ll cook 2 meals at once and freeze the 2nd meal for a later date.

Example: Cooking pasta for tonight’s dinner, and also a roasted whole chicken (or two) in the oven at the same time. (Since chicken takes a good 90 minutes to cook this way, it isn’t a practical option for a week-day meal unless it is cooked ahead of time.) I prep the chicken while I’m waiting for the pasta to cook, and throw it in the oven while we’re eating & cleaning up. Chickens are pieced & frozen after they cool, and that makes at least 2 main dishes for our family of four at a later date. (Cooking only the side dishes on the “day of” is easy, IMHO.)

I do batch cooking of certain things, but I don’t cover every single meal for a month or week – it would be too physically demanding for me. I’ll make a huge batch of spaghetti sauce, eat out of it one night, then freeze the rest. Maybe in 2 days I’ll make a huge pot of chili beans, eat out of it one night, and freeze the rest. Make a big meat loaf, serve it one night and either freeze or refrigerate the rest.

So, if I can, I’ll double or triple a recipe, eat out of it one night then save the rest for later.

This means that at least a couple of nights a week, I only have to thaw and heat something, most of the cooking is already done. This saves me time, and allows for variety, too.

Also, I prefer a pressure cooker to a slow cooker most of the time. I work from home, so I can take a few minutes, get the pressure cooker started, go back to work, and then in an hour or so quit for the day and finish up dinner.

I’m with you on the pressure cooker. I love using mine and use it often for making stocks or recipes that call for long braising times.

I tend to only use my slow cooker for holding food at temp during parties. I’ve used the slow cooker for a few recipes, but the flavors and textures always come out muddled and mushy. I’m just not a fan of the quality of food that comes out of a slow cooker.

Absolutely! I don’t cook for a month at a time – freezer too small, and I doubt I’d enjoy the pressure – but always make enough for two to three family dinners when I cook, and freeze the remainder in convenient portions. It’s a great way to be frugal and healthy AND to save time

I’m not a big fan of casseroles, and I also find what I feel like eating at the end of the day is not necessarily what I’d planned from the freezer. So like others mentioned above, I do pre-cook components, mostly the meats. I prefer my veggies and side dishes freshly prepared. Most of what I cook on weeknights takes 15 minutes or less. I can thaw some meatloaf and steam some veggies and/or cook some rice in 15 minutes. I can make some pizza dough in the morning (using the no knead method) and then toss some leftovers on it and its dinner. Stir frys and thai dishes only take a few minutes to chop veggies and then I can enjoy a glass of wine while its simmering.

I find food to be a joy, and a pleasure, and I guess I shy away from approaches to food as if its a chore, or an item on a checklist. Preparing food at the end of the day centers me, and puts me into the moment. Thaw and heat doesn’t have that same effect on me.

I love this idea. I never learned how to cook either. My mom worked full time and was a big fan of TV dinners, so I never had anyone to teach me. My husband does most of the cooking, because I’d be happy to eat cereal or grilled cheese sandwiches every night. I really should try this once a month cooking idea. It sounds much better than cooking every night and I would like my family to eat healthier meals. And it sounds like the crockpot makes it even easier.

I do a single person’s version of this – not so much because I don’t have time to cook, but more so I can take advantage of buying in bulk.

Most of my hacks revolve around meat –
- I buy a few trays of chicken wings or meat. When I go home I joint/chop them up and mix them in some sauce or honey and mustard (the meat gets chopped up and threaded onto skewers). They get portioned out into meals for 1 and stacked in the freezer where they continue marinading. When I get home I just tip a freezer bag’s worth into the oven or grill, steam some veges and it’s pretty much a no effort meal. I don’t even have to defrost as the portions are so small.
- Ready made peking duck – I always have a ready supply of flatbread pancakes and marinaded duck breast in the freezer. Flatbreads are so easy to make (just steam to reheat from frozen) and you have peking duck for 1
- Poussins make awesome mini roasts for 1. I make a bulk batch of stuffing and always have a few roasts ready to go in the fridge. I also butterfly out the poussins and marinade in portguese chilli sauce for a mini portuguese chicken.
- Bacon – I buy bacon in bulk, cut into batons and freeze in 3 – 4 tablespoon portions. They are awesome for mini omelettes (frozen bacon + frozen peas + frozen cheese + egg), cabonara or just as a flavour base to get a pasta sauce started.

I don’t think I could do a full day of cooking in the kitchen, but just by doing an extra 10 minutes prep when putting groceries away leaves me with ready to cook meals for any night of the week.

Another tip – don’t do it by yourself. Just two families working together can make it a lot easier – we’ve done that.

Our church does once-a-month cooking – MUCH larger batches, with 8-10 families, making 10 recipes (each family takes two batches of each recipe). Some prep work by individual families the day before, followed by one morning with a lot of work in the large church kitchen, and you’re done. 20 meals may not take you through the whole month, depending on your lifestyle, but it goes a long way.

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